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Frequently Asked Questions
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This is a list of Frequently Asked Questions about PHP3 and
their answers. If you have suggestions or additions, send them to
php3@lists.php.net .
General Information
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What is PHP3?
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From the manual:
PHP Version 3.0 is an HTML-embedded scripting
language. Much of its syntax is borrowed from C, Java and Perl with a
couple of unique PHP-specific features thrown in. The goal of the language
is to allow web developers to write dynamically generated pages quickly.
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What is its relation to PHP/FI?
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PHP3 is the successor to PHP/FI 2.0.
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Can I run both PHP/FI 2.0 and PHP3 at the same time?
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Yes, PHP3 was written so as to not interfere with an existing PHP/FI 2 installation.
Instructions for building Apache 1.3.0 with both PHP/FI 2 and PHP3 modules can be
found HERE.
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What are the differences between PHP3 and PHP/FI 2.0?
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For a complete list of the changes, read the CHANGES file included in the PHP3
distribution. Some highlights:
- All-new parser.
- Persistent database connections.
- A native Windows95/NT port.
- IMAP, SNMP, and LDAP extensions.
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I heard it's possible to access Microsoft SQL Server from PHP3. How?
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On Windows 95/NT machines, you can simply use the included ODBC support
and the correct ODBC driver.
On Unix machines, you can use the Sybase-CT driver
to access Microsoft SQL Servers because they are (at
least mostly) protocol-compatible. Sybase has made a free version of the necessary
libraries for Linux systems. For other Unix operating systems,
you need to contact Sybase for the correct libraries (which cost
money).
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Can I access Microsoft Access databases?
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Yes. You already have all the tools you need if you are running
entirely under Windows 95 or NT, where you can use ODBC and Microsoft's
ODBC drivers for Microsoft Access databases. From other platforms, you
would need to have a server running Windows NT (or possibly Windows 95)
which you connected to using ODBC drivers from your other platform and
OpenLink Software's ODBC Agent
software, which runs US$4,000.
Some better alternatives are to use an SQL server that has
Windows ODBC drivers and use that to store the data, which you can
then access from Microsoft Access (using ODBC) and PHP3 (using the
built-in drivers), or to use an intermediary file format that Access
and PHP3 both understand, such as flat-files or dBase databases.
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Is there a PHP3 mailing list?
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Of course! To subscribe, send mail to
php3-subscribe@lists.php.net . You don't need to include
anything special in the subject or body of the message.
To unsubscribe, send mail to php3-unsubscribe@lists.php.net .
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Help! I can't seem to subscribe to the mailing list!
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Help! I can't seem to unsubscribe from the mailing list!
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If you have problems subscribing to or unsubscribing from the
PHP3 mailng list, it may be because the mailing list software
can't figure out the correct mailing address to use. If
your email address was
joeblow@example.com ,
you can send your subscription request to
php3-subscribe-joeblow=example.com@lists.php.net ,
or your unsubscription request to
php3-unsubscribe-joeblow=example.com@lists.php.net .
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Is there an archive of the mailing list anywhere?
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Yes, it's located at http://www.tryc.on.ca/php3.html.
Obtaining PHP3
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Where can I obtain PHP3?
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You can download PHP3 from any of the members of the
PHP3 network of sites. These can be found at http://www.php.net/.
You can also use anonymous CVS to get the absolute latest
version of the source. For more information, go to http://ca.php.net/cvsweb.cgi.
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Are pre-compiled binary versions available?
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Yes, as long as you're looking for binaries for Windows 95 or NT.
They're available in the same place as the source.
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Where can I get libraries needed to compile some of the optional
PHP3 extensions?
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Note: Those marked with * are not thread-safe libraries, and
should not be used with PHP3 as a server module in the multi-threaded
Windows web servers (IIS, Netscape). This does not matter in Unix
environments, yet.
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How do I get these libraries to work?
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You will need to follow instructions provided with the library. Some of
these libraries are detected automatically when you run the 'configure'
script of PHP3 (such as the GD library), and others you will have to
enable using '--with-EXTENSION' options to 'configure'. Run 'configure
--help' for a listing of these.
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I got the latest version of the PHP3 source code from the CVS
repository on my Windows 95/NT machine, what do I need to compile it?
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First, you will need Microsoft Visual C++ v5 (v4 may do
it also, but we do it with v5), and you will need to download Bison and
Flex. You will need to put Bison and Flex somewhere in your
path, or add their location to your path. Then run the batch file
'makeparser' before compiling with MSVC. You also may need to edit
some settings in the project settings. You should be familier enough
with MSVC to know what to do ;).
Where do I find the Browser Capabilities File?
You can find PHP's own browscap.ini file at http://php.netvision.net.il/browscap/.
There is also another browscap.ini file at http://www.cyscape.com/asp/browscap/.
Installation
To install PHP3, follow the instructions in the INSTALL
file located in the distribution. Windows
95 and NT users should also read the README.WIN32
file. There are also some helpful hints for Windows users here:
http://leonard.staff.imaginet.fr/Doc/php/configuration_NT.html.
Common Problems
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I got the latest version of PHP3 using the anonymous CVS service,
but there's no configure script!
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You have to have the GNU autoconf package installed so you can
generate the configure script from configure.in. Just run
autoconf in the top-level directory after getting
the sources from the CVS server. (Also, unless you run configure
with the --enable-maintainer-mode option, the
configure script will not automatically get rebuilt when the
configure.in file is updated, so you should make sure to do that
manually when you notice configure.in has changed. One symptom
of this is finding things like @VARIABLE@ in your Makefile after
configure or config.status is run.
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I'm having problems configuring PHP3 to work with Apache. It says
it can't find httpd.h, but it's right where I said it is!
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You need to tell the configure/setup script the location of the
top-level of your Apache source tree. This means that
you want to specify '
--with-apache=/path/to/apache '
and not '--with-apache=/path/to/apache/src '.
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When I run configure, it says that it can't find the include files or
library for GD, gdbm, or some other package!
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You can make the configure script looks for header files and libraries
in non-standard locations by specifying additional flags to pass to
the C preprocessor and linker, such as:
CPPFLAGS=-I/path/to/include LDFLAGS=-L/path/to/library ./configure
If you're using a csh-variant for your login shell (why?), it would be:
env CPPFLAGS=-I/path/to/include LDFLAGS=-L/path/to/library ./configure
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When it is compiling the file language-parser.tab.c, it gives me errors
that say 'yytname undeclared'.
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You need to update your version of Bison. You can find the latest version
at ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/.
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When I run 'make', it seems to run fine but then fails when it
tries to link the final application complaining that it can't find
some files.
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Some old versions of make that don't correctly put the compiled
versions of the files in the functions directory into that same
directory. Try running "
cp *.o functions " and then
re-running 'make' to see if that helps. If it does, you should really
upgrade to a recent version of GNU make.
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When linking PHP3, it complains about a number of undefined references.
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Take a look at the link line and make sure that all of the appropriate
libraries are being included at the end. Common ones that you might have
missed are '-ldl' and any libraries required for any database support
you included.
If you're linking with Apache 1.2.x, did you remember to add the
appropriate information to the EXTRA_LIBS line of the Configuration
file and re-rerun Apache's Configure script? See the INSTALL file that
comes with the distribution for more information.
Some people have also reported that they had to add '-ldl' immediately
following 'libphp3.a' when linking with Apache.
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I can't figure out how to build PHP3 with Apache 1.3.
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This is actually quite easy. Follow these steps carefully:
- Grab the latest Apache 1.3 distribution from www.apache.org.
- Ungzip and untar it somewhere, for example /usr/local/src/apache-1.3.
- Compile PHP3 by first running ./configure --with-apache=/<path>/apache-1.3 (substitute <path> for the actual path to your apache-1.3 directory.
- Type 'make' followed by 'make install' to build PHP3 and copy the
necessary files to the Apache distribution tree.
- Change directories into to your /<path>/apache-1.3/src directory and edit the Configuration file. At the end of the file, add: AddModule modules/php3/libphp3.a.
- Type: './Configure' followed by 'make'.
- You should now have a PHP3-enabled httpd binary!
Note: You can also use the new Apache ./configure script. See the instructions in the README.configure file
which is part of your Apache distribution. Also have a look at the INSTALL file in the PHP distribution.
Using PHP3
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I would like to write a generic PHP script that can handle data coming
from any form. How do I know which POST method variables are available?
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You need to compile PHP with the "--enable-track-vars" configure switch.
This creates three associative arrays. $HTTP_GET_VARS, $HTTP_POST_VARS
and $HTTP_COOKIE_VARS. So, to write a generic script to handle POST
method variables you would need something similar to the following:
while (list($var, $value) = each($HTTP_POST_VARS)) {
echo "$var = $value<br>n";
}
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I need to convert all single-quotes (') to a backslash followed by
a single-quote. How can I do this with a regular expression?
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First off, take a look at the addslashes() function. It will do
exactly what you want.
The ereg_replace magic you're looking for, however, is simply:
$escaped = ereg_replace("'", "\'", $input);
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When I do the following, the output is printed in the wrong order:
function myfunc($argument) {
echo $myfunc + 10;
}
$variable = 10;
echo "myfunc($variable) = " . myfunc($variable);
What's going on?
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To be able to use the results of your function in an expression (such
as concatenating it with other strings in the example above), you need
to return the value, not echo it.
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Hey, what happened to my newlines in:
<PRE>
1 <?echo $result[1];?>
2 <?echo $result[2];?>
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In PHP, the ending for a block of code is either "?>" or
"?>n" (where n means a newline). This means that you need to
insert an extra newline after each block of PHP code in the above
example.
Why does PHP do this? Because when formatting normal HTML, this
usually makes your life easier because you don't want that newline,
but you'd have to create extremely long lines or otherwise make the
raw page source unreadable to achieve that effect.
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I need to access information in the request header directly. How can
I do this?
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The getallheaders() function will do this if you are running PHP as a
module. So, the following bit of code will show you all the request
headers:
$headers = getallheaders();
for(reset($headers); $key = key($headers); next($headers)) {
echo "headers[$key] = ".$headers[$key]."<br>n";
}
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When I try to use authentication with IIS I get 'No Input file specified'
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The security model of IIS is at fault here. This is a problem
common to all CGI programs running under IIS. A workaround is
to create a plain HTML file (not parsed by php) as the entry page
into an authenticated directory. Then use a META tag to redirect
to the PHP page, or have a link to the PHP page. PHP will
then recognize the authentication correctly. When the ISAPI
module is ready, this will no longer be a problem. This should
not effect other NT web servers. For more information, see: http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/q160/4/22.asp.
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I've followed all the instructions, but still can't get PHP and IIS
to work together!
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Make sure any user who needs to run a PHP script has the rights
to run php.exe! IIS uses an anonymous user which is added at the
time IIS is installed. This user needs rights to php.exe. Also,
any authenticated user will also need rights to execute php.exe.
New Features
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I saw PHP3 offers persistent database connections. What does that mean?
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Persistent connections are SQL links that do not close when the
execution of your script ends. When a persistent connection is
requested, PHP checks if there's already an identical persistent
connection (that remained open from earlier) - and if it exists, it
uses it. If it does not exist, it creates the link. An 'identical'
connection is a connection that was opened to the same host, with
the same username and the same password (where applicable).
People who aren't thoroughly familiar with the way web servers
work and distribute the load may mistake persistent connects for what
they're not. In particular, they do not give you an ability
to open 'user sessions' on the same SQL link, they do not
give you an ability to build up a transaction efficently, and they
don't do a whole lot of other things. In fact, to be extremely
clear about the subject, persistent connections don't give you any
functionality that wasn't possible with their non-persistent brothers.
Why?
This has to do with the way web servers work. There are three ways
in which your web server can utilize PHP to generate web pages.
The first method is to use PHP as a CGI "wrapper". When run this
way, an instance of the PHP interpreter is created and destroyed for
every page request (for a PHP page) to your web server. Because it
is destroyed after every request, any resources that it acquires (such
as a link to an SQL database server) are closed when it is destroyed.
In this case, you do not gain anything from trying to use persistent
connections -- they simply don't persist.
The second, and most popular, method is to run PHP as a module
in a multiprocess web server, which currently only includes
Apache. A multiprocess server typically has one process (the parent)
which coordinates a set of processes (its children) who actually do
the work of serving up web pages. When each request comes in from a a
client, it is handed off to one of the children that is not already
serving another client. This means that when the same client makes
a second request to the server, it may be serviced by a different
child process than the first time. What a persistent connection does
for you in this case it make it so each child process only needs
to connect to your SQL server the first time that it serves a page
that makes us of such a connection. When another page then requires
a connection to the SQL server, it can reuse the connection that
child established earlier.
The last method is to use PHP as a plug-in for a multithreaded
web server. Currently this is only theoretical -- PHP does not
yet work as a plug-in for any multithreaded web servers. Work is
progressing on support for ISAPI, WSAPI, and NSAPI (on Windows),
which will all allow PHP to be used as a plug-in on multithreaded
servers like Netscape FastTrack, Microsoft's Internet Information
Server (IIS), and O'Reilly's WebSite Pro. When this happens, the
behavior will be essentially the same as for the multiprocess model
described before.
If persistent connections don't have any added functionality,
what are they good for?
The answer here is extremely simple -- efficiency. Persistent
connections are good if the overhead to create a link to your SQL
server is high. Whether or not this overhead is really high depends
on many factors. Like, what kind of database it is, whether or
not it sits on the same computer on which your web server sits,
how loaded the machine the SQL server sits on is and so forth.
The bottom line is that if that connection overhead is high,
persistent connections help you considerably. They cause the child
process to simply connect only once for its entire lifespan, instead
of every time it processes a page that requires connecting to the
SQL server. This means that for every child that opened a persistent
connection will have its own open persistent connection to the server.
For example, if you had 20 different child processes that ran a script
that made a persistent connection to your SQL server, you'd have 20
different connections to the SQL server, one from each child.
An important summary. Persistent connections were designed to
have one-to-one mapping to regular connections. That means that you
should always be able to replace persistent connections with
non-persistent connections, and it won't change the way your script
behaves. It may (and probably will) change the efficiency
of the script, but not its behavior!
Common Problems
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I installed PHP3, but every time I load a document, I get the
message 'Document Contains No Data'! What's going on here?
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This probably means that PHP3 is having some sort of problem
and is core-dumping. Look in your server error log to see if
this is the case, and then try to reproduce the problem with
a small test case. If you know how to use 'gdb', it is very
helpful when you can provide a backtrace with your bug report
to help the developers pinpoint the problem.
If your script uses the regular expression functions (ereg()
and friends), you should make sure that you compiled PHP3 and
Apache with the same regular expression package. (This should
happen automatically with PHP3 and Apache 1.3.)
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I'm trying to access one of the standard CGI variables (such
as $DOCUMENT_ROOT or $HTTP_REFERER) in a user-defined function,
and it can't seem to find it. What's wrong?
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Environment variables are now normal global variables, so you must
either declare them as global variables in your function (by using
"
global $DOCUMENT_ROOT; ", for example) or by using
the global variable array (ie, "$GLOBALS["DOCUMENT_ROOT"] ".
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I think I found a bug! Who should I tell?
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You should go to the PHP Bug Database and make sure the bug
isn't a known bug. If you don't see it in the database, use
the reporting form to report the bug. It is important to use
the bug database instead of just sending an email to one of the
mailing lists because the bug will have a tracking number assigned
and it will then be possible for you to go back later and check
on the status of the bug. The bug database can be found at http://ca.php.net/bugs.php3.
Migrating from PHP/FI 2.0
Common Problems
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When I add two strings together and then echo it, it echoes zero instead
of the concatenation of the two strings! What's going on? Wouldn't it
be great if adding two strings just concatenated them together?
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PHP3 does not support the overloading of the addition operator for
strings because values that arrive via the GET and POST methods and
from databases are always stored as strings. This means that if the
plus operator were overloaded to concatenate strings, you could add
what you thought were two numbers and get the wrong result! (For
example, "4" + "5" would be equal to "45".) One way around this would
be to explicitly type-cast one or both of the operands, which is what
PHP/FI 2 did.
This has been simplified in PHP3 by the addition of a real string
concatenation operator. If you want to "add" two strings together,
just write it like: "this" . "that" which will result in
the string "thisthat".
The answer to the final part of the question is an emphatic no.
Operator overloading can be a source of great confusion, especially
when variables aren't very strongly typed to begin with, as they are
in PHP3.
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When I use the chmod(), umask(), or mkdir() functions, the permissions
are wrong!
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Unlike PHP/FI 2, PHP3 does not interpret the numeric arguments for
these functions any differently than for any other function, which
means you need to pass in an octal value if you are specifying an
octal number, such as:
chmod($myfile, 0600);
not
chmod($myfile, 600);
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I converted my script from PHP/FI 2.0 to PHP3 syntax, but now it just
hangs! When I looked at the processes running on my server, there was
one process that was chewing up all of the CPU cycles!
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You probably missed the semi-colon on a
while
(condition); statement. This will cause PHP3 to spin out of
control because it is simply executing an empty body for your while
loop! Change the semi-colon to a colon and it should work correctly.
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My user-functions don't work any more! I get a "Parse error (expecting '('"
on the first line of the function.
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PHP3's function declaration now resembles C function declarations, so
your function should look like:
function printsum($a, $b) {
echo $a + $b;
}
You can also use old-style function declarations by use the
'old_function' designation, like so:
old_function printsum $a, $b (
echo $a + $b;
);
Credits
This FAQ was originally written by Jim Winstead. It is currently
maintained by the PHP Development Team.
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